Long-Term Impact of a Medical School Course on the Intersection of Art and Medical History.

MedEdPublish (2016) Pub Date : 2024-08-22 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/mep.20112.2
Bobbi G Coller, Gabriel Slamovits, Barry S Coller
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Abstract

Background: One recent trend in medical education is the integration of humanities into the curriculum, including viewing works of art in museums, with analysis of short-term, but not long-term, impact. We developed a course for medical students, trainees, and faculty at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai co-taught by an art historian and a physician/medical historian that features images of great works of art to make connections between art and medical history with the following goals: 1. To encourage the students to make careful and systematic observations, describe what they see to others in the group, and exchange their views respectfully, 2. To sensitize students to the patient's experience of illness by discussing artists' depictions of patients and the impact of their illness on family and friends, and 3. To highlight milestones in medical history by focusing on artworks that epitomize the state of medical care and science at a defined point in time. We have taught the course for more than a decade and so wanted to assess whether participating in the course had a long-term impact.

Methods: We created and deployed a five-question survey to 167 students and received responses from 35 of those students.

Results: 97% of respondents answered that they still think about the course, and large majorities of the respondents indicated that the course, had an impact on how they viewed works of art (91%), their appreciation of the history of medicine (89%), and their observational skills (80%). More than half the students responded that the course sensitized them to the patient's perspective of illness (63%) and had an impact on how they viewed their role as a physician (51%).

Conclusions: Our course has had a long-term impact on the respondents across a wide range of professional and personal characteristics.

医学院课程对艺术与医学史交叉的长期影响。
背景:医学教育最近的一个趋势是将人文学科纳入课程,包括在博物馆观看艺术作品,并分析短期影响,而不是长期影响。我们为西奈山伊坎医学院的医学生、实习生和教职员工开设了一门课程,由一位艺术史学家和一位医生/医学史学家共同教授,以伟大艺术作品的图像为特色,建立艺术和医学历史之间的联系,目标如下:鼓励学生仔细、系统地观察,向小组中的其他人描述他们所看到的,并尊重地交换意见。2 .通过讨论艺术家对病人的描绘以及他们的疾病对家人和朋友的影响,使学生对病人的疾病经历敏感;通过专注于在特定时间点集中体现医疗保健和科学状况的艺术品,突出医学史上的里程碑。我们教授这门课程已经十多年了,所以想评估一下参加这门课程是否会产生长期影响。方法:我们对167名学生进行了5个问题的调查,并收到了其中35名学生的回复。结果:97%的受访者回答说他们仍然会想到这门课程,大多数受访者表示,这门课程对他们如何看待艺术品(91%)、对医学史的欣赏(89%)和观察技能(80%)产生了影响。超过一半的学生回应说,该课程使他们对病人的疾病观点更加敏感(63%),并影响了他们如何看待自己作为医生的角色(51%)。结论:我们的课程在广泛的专业和个人特征方面对受访者产生了长期影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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